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Under Attack, Credit Raters Turn to the First Amendment

HuffPost Investigative Fund   First Posted: 03/18/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 03:30 PM ET

Editor's note: This is the first of three articles by the Investigative Fund on the credit rating companies. To help with the investigation, sign up here.

For two decades, the nation's top credit rating agencies have managed to fend off a crackdown from Washington by relying on a surprising ally - the First Amendment.

Despite their key role in the most recent economic calamity, the three big bond raters--Standard & Poor's, Moody's and Fitch--seem poised to do it again. With help from two of the most storied constitutional lawyers in the country, the raters have successfully argued that when they make a mistake -- say, awarding the top triple-A grade to a multibillion-dollar bundle of bonds that later default -- they cannot be sued or held accountable.

That's because ratings are opinions, the agencies claim, protected by the constitutional right to free speech.

A Huffington Post Investigative Fund examination of court filings, congressional testimony and Securities and Exchange Commission documents illustrates how the companies have repeatedly invoked that right to free speech to dodge government regulation and court action. The raters have never lost a courtroom battle to a disgruntled investor, not even in the Enron scandal. Enron enjoyed high grades on its bonds just four days before it filed for bankruptcy in 2001.

Critics of the rating companies argue that they are misusing the Bill of Rights to protect a flawed but highly profitable business.

Frank Partnoy, who used to design investment products while working for Morgan Stanley, said that given the success of the First Amendment defense, it is not surprising the companies have published "unreasonably high" ratings. "Rating agencies have had a free go at it under a cloak of the First Amendment," said Partnoy, now a professor at the University of San Diego Law School.

But Floyd Abrams, the renowned First Amendment lawyer who has represented Standard and Poor's for more than 20 years, said the rating companies are entitled to the same free-speech protections afforded to journalists.

"It's an opinion," Abrams said. He acknowledged: "It may not be a great opinion if, when you look back on it, you say, 'you gave it triple-A, how could you do this?'"

To be sure, there have been some small cracks in the credit raters' defenses given the magnitude of the current financial crisis. Last month, a federal judge in New York declined to dismiss an investor's lawsuit even in the face of a First Amendment claim.

And on Wednesday, the House Financial Services Committee approved the latest bill designed to rein in the agencies. But after hearing testimony last month from the raters' lawyers and executives, the committee backed off a plan to make the companies collectively liable for mistakes in each others' ratings.

Partnoy said he expects lawmakers to water down most attempts at tightening regulation of the business.

"I've watched the rating agencies be recklessly wrong, over and over again, and I've seen them get nothing more than a slap on the wrist," said Partnoy, who is also an expert consultant for the government, defense attorneys and plaintiffs, including investors who sue the raters. "Anytime you can hold up the Constitution, it's going to get people's attention."

'The Safest Possible Place'

Credit raters are entrenched in the U.S. financial system.

When banks, corporations or city governments want to raise money, they issue debt in the form of bonds for investors to purchase. The rating companies judge the quality of the bonds. Ratings can range from the highly-coveted triple-A to the "junk" bond status of C or lower.

For several decades, until the early 1970s, the big three raters charged investors for ratings. Then the rating companies started charging the banks and companies that issue the bonds. That payment arrangement, critics argue, creates an inherent conflict of interest, where the agencies serve the issuers rather than the investors who rely on the ratings.

King County in Washington state relied on ratings and lost between $70 and $100 million from a several-billion dollar fund that manages, among other things, school lunch programs, according to the countys lawyers. Along with the Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, the county filed a lawsuit against S&P and Moody's alleging that they used "flawed" assumptions to issue "false and misleading" ratings.

Some of the investments King County made were rated triple-A, its suit alleges, leading the county to believe it was making conservative decisions.

"They were trying to be good fiduciaries and put their money in the safest possible place," said Patrick Daniels, an attorney for the county.

Despite the top rating, the investment was actually quite risky. The county had bought into structured investment vehicles, which are complex bundles of bonds backed by assets such as mortgages, credit cards and car loans. When the mortgages defaulted, so went the bonds, and ultimately the county's money.

Another lawsuit brought by the California Public Employees' Retirement System alleges that the fees for rating structured products ranged from $300,000 to $1 million per deal.

Indeed, the rating companies saw their profits peak in 2006 and 2007 while structured products were flourishing. Now that bubble has burst, and the raters' profits have returned to 2005 levels. But even in a down year like 2008, S&P and Moody's generated more than $1.7 billion in revenue. Moody's last year had net income of $457 million while Standard and Poor's saw operating profits of more than $1 billion, although that total includes earnings from the S&P index.

Fitch is not a publicly traded company so its profits are unknown. Fitch and Moody's officials declined requests for an interview.

A federal judge in New York last month threw out most of King County's claims but refused to dismiss the suit altogether. In a rare defeat for the agencies' First Amendment defense, Judge Shira Scheindlin said in a preliminary ruling that because the county alleged the ratings were not widely published, the companies weren't entitled to free-speech protections.

'Part of the Culture'

Some former Moody's employees believe the rating companies are wrong to claim free-speech protections.

"To my eye, the problem with the First Amendment defense is it seems to shield them from any accountability," said Jerome Fons, a former managing director for credit quality at Moody's.

Eric Kolchinsky, a former Moody's managing director turned critic of the company, said that the First Amendment defense enabled some Moody's analysts to adopt a laissez faire attitude toward the quality of ratings. "Some people almost didn't even care because they feel it's just an opinion," said Kolchinsky, who is also a lawyer. "It's part of the culture there."

Kolchinsky added, however, that he believes the raters' First Amendment protections should not be lifted entirely.

Egan-Jones Rating Co. is a smaller competitor of the big three that sells its ratings to investors instead of bond issuers to avoid a conflict of interest. Sean Egan, the company's managing director, believes that rating companies should be entitled to some free-speech protections because "it's legitimate to make mistakes." But when bond issuers pay for ratings, Egan said, "there's a clear bias" and the "potential liability should increase."

Floyd Abrams is joined in his defense of the companies by Laurence Tribe, a longtime Harvard Law professor who was hired by Moody's in June. He was a law-school mentor to then-student Barack Obama and later became an adviser to Obama's presidential campaign.

In an interview with the Investigative Fund, Abrams said that credit ratings are educated opinions about the quality of bonds, not guarantees that the bonds will or will not default."Is it an opinion based upon a level of expert knowledge and analysis? I hope so," Abrams said. "That certainly is what rating agencies try to be and try to do."

The First Amendment protects other opinions, such as newspaper editorials, so why not credit ratings, he argues.

Abrams noted that there are some limitations to the First Amendment defense. It cannot shield the raters from fraud, he said. And even with free-speech protections, Abrams said the agencies still face some accountability for their ratings.

"We've got lots of lawsuits." About forty to be more exact, he said.

'Believe It When I See It'

Investors are also looking to Congress and the SEC to hold the rating companies accountable.

But nearly every time the SEC has broached the idea of rating agency reform, the companies have filed comments with the commission invoking the First Amendment, records show. In the face of these claims, the SEC has often either abandoned or modified some of its attempts at regulation. The rating companies said they have tightened internal controls in response to criticism and remain open to some government oversight.

More recently, the commission enacted some rating agency regulations to increase competition among the agencies and require them to disclose their conflicts of interest. The commission also approved rules this month that will require agencies to disclose a history of their ratings. It's now discussing a plan to expose the rating companies to greater liability in certain situations.

But Congress has prevented the SEC from changing the rating companies' methodologies. Abrams and agency executives have flocked to Capital Hill in recent years to remind lawmakers that those methodologies are protected by the First Amendment, congressional testimony shows.

Rep. Paul Kanjorski (D-Pa.), a member of the House Financial Services Committee, proposed a draft bill last month that would have required the companies to share liability when one violates securities laws. The committee approved a modified proposal Wednesday, by a 49-14 vote, without such a provision. The bill would instead make it easier for investors to sue the companies if they fail to follow their own rating methods, a feature sure to attract opposition from the companies as it hits the House floor and the Senate.

Partnoy, the law professor, said he doubts Congress will allow much to change.

"I'll believe it when I see it," he said. "The agencies are on their own, against common sense and public opinion, and yet they continue to win."

Maria Zilberman and Rachel Leven contributed research for this report.


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Editor's note: This is the first of three articles by the Investigative Fund on the credit rating companies. To help with the investigation, sign up here. For two decades, the nation's top credit ...
Editor's note: This is the first of three articles by the Investigative Fund on the credit rating companies. To help with the investigation, sign up here. For two decades, the nation's top credit ...
 
 
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11:59 AM on 12/18/2009
It's an incestuous marriage between the good 'ole boys and girls! Banks are hiding behind their lawyers, and lawyers are hiding behind their banks while they continue to give out huge bonuses to each other---quid pro quo---and everyone goes home happy and thrilled to have fooled the public once again. It's time to start questioning the ethics and dealings of the Wall St. gamblers, since obviously the ratings agencies won't do it!
09:10 AM on 11/01/2009
If "Two Girls One Cup" is Constitutionally protected free speech, (and I think it should be), then the Opinions of Bond Raters should also be Constitutionally protected free speech.

That said, I also think BOTH examples of free speech should be viewed as essentially the same, content-wise, and be avoided by everybody.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnSawyer
arglebargy
02:07 AM on 11/01/2009
As SSaffer commented earlier here, why not set up one or more independent ratings bodies, which the investors fund, as they used to? They wouldn't have to be government-run, and with several operating, investors could decide which they trusted more, based on performance. Do such ratings companies already exist, but which many investors don't know about, or deliberately don't use since many investors are also involved in the whole scam?

I don't know how ratings agencies get the supposed data they use to determine ratings (I suspect the three mentioned in this article--Standard & Poor's, Moody's and Fitch--often operate according to a "gentleman's agreement" with many of the companies they rate, to just rubber-stamp many bonds as highly rated, and then go out for a drink or a spin on the yacht), but I suspect that some or much of the data is confidential, which the companies seeking the ratings wouldn't give to independent bodies unless required to do so by law (there's an idea), but even if that's true, certainly there's enough non-confidential information available on nearly all bond issuers to allow independent raters to determine more accurate ratings than the "top three" do.

As Partnoy says in the article: "I've watched the rating agencies be recklessly wrong, over and over again..." With that kind of record, why do many investors rely on these three agencies, especially after these agencies colluded, with the companies they rate, to allow the world's economies to collapse?
02:28 AM on 10/30/2009
IMO credit rating agencies are organized crime.
10:44 PM on 10/29/2009
Isn't that what criminals usually do?
02:40 PM on 10/29/2009
It seems to me the First Amendment defense is pretty weak.

Doctors also issue "opinions" that we believe because doctors are supposed to be experts in their field, as these credit agencies are in theirs. But if doctors don't do proper DUE DILIGENCE, and their opinions are wrong, they can still be sued. So should it be w/ these ratings agencies.
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04:16 PM on 11/11/2009
The only difference between those two analogies is the money flowing to politicians from each group.
02:38 PM on 10/29/2009
as for the credit agencies free-speech rights... back in 1994, my wife and i learned that our credit record and that of our small business were filled with blatant falsehoods. we found this out when the department of labor came asking why we weren't paying taxes or unemployment compensation into the funds of our alleged 12 employees at a business operation we were said to have at an address in greenwich village. as my wife and i were the sole employees of our business and as there was no such address on 2nd street here... we figured we'd best get a lawyer. not cheap, lawyers...

digging into dun&bradstreet, TRW/equifax/transunion; we found that we were said to have debts we had not engaged and a business which was not ours at all. our lawyer requested that these be removed immediately. it took months until they did remove the falsehoods.

but then, 30-60 days later, checking back, we found that the lies were back! our lawyer took them to task and was told as if it was a joke, "well, you know how it is; we get in these databases and just pour them in. we really can't verify each and every piece of data on everybody." she demanded that these lies be removed and kept removed. this process didn't stop for many months, until we issued threats of lawsuits against these coffee-clatches of rumour-mongers...
02:38 PM on 10/29/2009
since the herbert hoover administration, the courts have increasingly granted the 'god-given inalienable rights' in the constitution to corporations. while the rightwing likes to insist that this was founded to be a christian nation of laissez faire capitalism run amok... to the contrary. the american revolutionaries were ardent admirers of the french revolutionaries, you know the ones who set up the communes, (commune-ists) to overthrow the 'let them eat cake' crowd. it was these who gave jefferson/franklin the guns and money to carry out what king george II called their treasonous, terrorist revolution.

jefferson: "it is our fervent hope that we shall crush in its infancy the moneyed aristocracy of the corporations who already bid defiance to our revolution and the laws of the country." franklin: "tight rein must be kept on the world of business lest it usurp our liberties and make a sham of our democracy." well, sorry, boys, that's been over for almost 200 years now. alexander hamilton and the bankers won out bigtime.

mussolini said, "fascism should more properly be called corporatism as it is the merger of governmental and industrial powers." who would know better than mussolini. doesn't that define america?
02:30 PM on 10/29/2009
It does not take a scholar to find loopholes within the founding documents that are suppose to be the peak of all American pride and/or its prestige (the constitution). But the irony of the matter is that those same people who hold that document up as a precursor of founding-father excellence and/or their brilliancy...Are the same people who defile it (and render it useless) in the pursute of their on self-gratifying agendas, and/or for profit. "Yes"...It's OK to state your opinion when it's harmless, and it speaks (responsively) to whatever the subject-matter may be. But when you're a journalist and/or a credit-rater. Your "oppinion" not-only intrudes on the masses of others...But it has the ability to both influence vs bulk, or resist vs support (as it relates to financial decisions, and/or war). These so-called opinions are-not just educated guesses (out of the clear blue sky). They're suppose to be informative enlightenments backed-up by the most credible resources at their disposal...Inside info & records for credit-raters, and sources-on-the-ground for journalist. The problem is 'not' that the American penal system cannot bring these kind of prognosticators, and/or trick-doers to some kind of an accountabillity. It's that it won't...Based on the good-Ole-boys type philosophies. In the end, this same type-of you're-like-me (discriminatory-type) philosophy will be(ultimately) the demise of America itself!
12:36 PM on 10/29/2009
So what they are essentially arguing is their multi-million dollar 'product' could be replaced by a 'Magic 8 Ball'. Maybe all their ratings, like horoscopes, should carry disclaimers - 'For entertainment purposes only'
12:07 PM on 10/29/2009
SUPER-INTELLIGENT RICH ----- STUPID LIKE A FOX

Mass media, all owned or financed by the corporate rich, they try to
tell us that the super-rich have such a naive and superficial understanding
of how worthless the big rating agencies are.

Truth is the big rating agencies are just for show, just to fool the public
so that the super rich can invest trillions at the highest possible risk,
so they can make the highest possible profit, and do it with the public
assuming all the losses. Socialism for the rich actually.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SSaffer
11:33 AM on 10/29/2009
Why can't the government simply set up another group of rating agencies; then we will have more "opinions" to choose from -- like having a second opinion from another doctor. I guess the problem with this concept is provided in the first few words; it's "simple." I'm sure there is a lawyer somewhere who can find someplace "in the constitution" to back this particular application for their specific position on the free-speech amendment. The foolish mistake (or legal trickery) is to believe that the VERY SHORT, CONCISE, BROADLY written constitution covers every situation in specific detail. That's what judges are for, to "apply" the law, not quote it and say it applies exactly to someone's own opinion!
12:44 PM on 10/29/2009
BRAVISIMO!

Hey..you GOT IT! You really do..that IS what to do!

WHY are they not doing that? WHY?

You have blown my mind with that one...I am writing to my 'Representative" right after this post..becasue what you have come up with WILL WORK..and again..WHY it isn't being done..is..ALARMING..it is almost...to me.INSTANT "PROOF" that there IS..IN FACT...."COLLUSION" between the Power Brokers to keep...KEEP this "FRAUDULENT" system in place...

Your proposal..is a RARE GEM...for it is SO..AMAZINGLY STRAIGHT FORWARD..that it simply CANNOT BE "SPUN"...In order to make the idea of a "SECOND OPINION" seem somehow..'Wrong"..well...I cannot think of a way to do that...WHO..WOULD NOT..want a SECOND OPINION? Especially now...

For these Cpompanies to say..literally...'Well..WE..actually CAN Yell Fire in a Theatre..because WE stand to PROFIT by it.." They are actually ADMITTING..straight out..that they are LIARS! That their "OPINIONS" are..actually...UNTRUE...So..HOW is that 'Legal'..especially when the RESULT..is actual..well..DEATH..Injury..LOSS..People's lives are RUINED! This is like BushII defending the WMD Lie with "well...we were just exercising our 1st amendment rights.."

Anyway...you figured this one out..you really have...and i am a SUPPORTER of this idea..THANK YOU...
02:45 PM on 10/29/2009
in a corporatist state, why on earth would you trust the government data-gatherers any more than their buddies in business. i guess we should 'count our blessings' that they haven't brought back debtor's prisons... while that was one of the reasons for the revolution, it was soon brought back and wasn't finally stopped until the mid-1800s. i guess debtors prisons today might present a problem... most americans are up to their household's necks in debt and seems to me that the financial criminals are now in debt to the people for some $16 trilion in bailouts and obscured guarantees. there might not be enough people left who are NOT in debt to guard the prisons, eh?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tiggerchick
if your view is myopic, go get Lasik
11:31 AM on 10/29/2009
But if these same companies wanted to fire someone for excessive use of profanities, or not adhering to a dress code, etc., that employee would not be able to sue them based on freedom of speech because of employee at will and the fact that private companies do not have to adhere to the Constitution...I love the having it both ways. Even if the argument was valid, it bothers me so much because it's such a pansy argument. "We don't even have to pretend to defend our complete ineptitude or the possible fact that we're bought off because we'll just hide behind the Constitution." Nah, they're not implying that the public is just a bunch of chumps....the absolute hubris of these people.
03:21 PM on 10/31/2009
You entirely miss the beauty of "at will" employment. Under "at will" you can be fired for any reason or no reason at all, i.e., blue eyes, 3rd person through the door, do not like your shoes. More enlightened states include the provision that as long as it does not violate public policy, i.e., attempt to block your access to the courts, etc.
11:25 AM on 10/29/2009
So what happens when a doctor gives a bad medical "opinion". Is he covered by the first amendment. I think not. It's called malpractice.
02:47 PM on 10/29/2009
well said!
10:42 AM on 10/29/2009
TRUST THE RICH ----- ARE THEY NOT THE MOST HONEST?

The super-intelligent rich want to make excessive profits, but to do
this they need to invest trillions at a high risk.

So the rich need to fool the public into thinking they are not intentionally
putting the economy at rich. So this is what ratings agencies are all about,
just one big smoke screen.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SSaffer
11:42 AM on 10/29/2009
I agree with you, Wisconsin Dave, with a small expection. Your description of "super-intelligent rich" is not necessarily accurate. Maybe super-dishonest, super-well connected, super-uncaring, super-slippery paper-movers may work, but they don't HAVE to be intelligent to do what they are doing; in fact, if they were as intelligent as they want us to believe, they could earn their money like Bill Gates did -- do something of value for society.

The problem for the "super rich" is that America is waking up and we aren't so dumb (uninformed) any more! As we discover and practice applying our own intelligence, it will be harder and harder for these super-crooks to make money off us!
02:54 PM on 10/29/2009
sir, hate to say it but... if "america is waking up" where is the appropriate revolt? the criminals bask in the $16.7 trillion in loans and guarantees made by bush and obamabush; won't lend us who 'loaned' them this bailout of criminals a dime even to startup a new business. the insipid stimulus package gave the comfortable more bush-style tax cuts and not one penny for the SBA to give new business startups in a country that now needs 15 miliion new jobs!

the rightwing and its MSM gets millions to support corporate-communism while denuoncing healthcare as socialism!
11:52 AM on 10/29/2009
Many experts will argue that most of our wealth has been shipped
out to the country, invested China and other things,
an impossible situation.

We in America fail to organize for one main reason, we are fooled
into thinking the super-intelligent are stupid, mixed up and irrational.
We cannot defeat our rich dictator until we realize how intelligent
and capable they are.